Ask About Illuminati ?

Just ran across this video, and frankly, I am not surprised. I've stated in numerous threads my thoughts on TPTB....the Elites...whatever you want to
call Them, and their need to put their plans in our faces. They use this as some form of self appreciation, like a ritual, teasing you, telling you
they are there, daring you to recognize or try to stop their agenda.

This is a clip from the Disney cartoon Ducktales (in German), pause it around :16, then watch the entire vid-

I don't know how more clear that can be....

Why "ask about Illuminati" ? Not sure but looks like programming for our children to me.

After effects and a bunch of other programs I believe are able to put things like this in video. It's worth checking the original.

I'm not one to jump on the "Illuminati controls Hollywood" bandwagon, but if this is in the original it's worth looking into nonetheless.

I would guess an artist may have been a fan of some of the "Illuminati" pop culture which starting emerging from that time.

The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson is a three-book science fiction series published in the 1970s, which is regarded
as a cult classic particularly in the hacker community. An incomplete comic book version of the Illuminatus! was produced and published by Eye-n-Apple
Productions and Rip Off Press between 1987 and 1991. Robert Anton Wilson also wrote The Historical Illuminati Chronicles in the early 1980s, and
several other books and stories making use of it.

The New World Order, whether it's Bohemian Grove, the Illuminati, the Freemasons, or Zionist Jews, would not be "revealed" through children's
cartoons. Animators, directors, and screenwriters have fun making these things, and as such, will often incorporate current public interest into
them.

Take, for an example, the film "2012" from the year 2009. Hollywood was not warning us about 2012, they were not revealing secret New World Order
plans. They took common public opinions about the subject: exploding volcanoes, giant tidal waves, solar radiation, earthquakes and fault-line
collapses; and combined them with other fringe fears: Russian evacuation arcs, the Maya calender countdown, and a worldwide conspiracy of rich, elite
individuals who knew it was coming and prepared to leave. This premise was not because it is real, but because those were the common trends circling
the noosphere about a possible 2012 event at the time the movie was made.

In the case of cartoons, the animators, writers, and directors are doing the same thing. They see something which appeals to the demographic they are
interested in getting to view, so they push the animation, storyline, and effects towards that thing.

Disney writers and animators, for example, are extremely edgy. Their comic book artists (where a majority of Ducktales comes from) were also very hip
about modern trends and cultural memes. As an example, look up how Scrooge McDuck, in "The Dream of a Lifetime" comic, outlines the plot of
Christopher Nolan's "Inception" years before the movie was made. Disney, writing a comic about dream realities, being caught in them, haunted by
past tormentors, and inevitably having to escape by releasing past trauma. Seems pretty interesting. But not Illuminati.

In fact, if you look at the context of the scene from the clip you've posted, you'll see that Scrooge is visiting a free clinic to get diagnosed by
a quack of a doctor, who says the "mental health" clinic is somewhere else. The scene is suggesting that the doctor, the office, and everything
there-in are products of insanity. Disney then, is suggesting that the Illuminati are a product of irrational idiocy.

I, for one, agree with Disney here.

There are no Illuminati anymore. The historical organizations all died out by 1779.

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